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I'm not surprised that Sony wasted no time make it's announcement after Nintendo.

Looks like Sony will take a similar approach as Nintendo, it's next handheld will take an evolutionary step as opposed to going in a different direction. PSP 2 has what most people are looking for in a gaming handheld:

The graphics look really good, but it seems too gimmicky to me. Front and back touch screens? Two cameras? Accelerometer? How many gimmicks does it need? I'm damn surprised this isn't 3D without the glasses like the 3DS is.

I'm much more excited for this than I am the 3DS. Instead of getting N64 ports we'll be getting PS3/360 comparable games. My concern is of course adoption rate. Will this sell enough to even be a viable platform past launch? Here's to hoping.

And since this is my first post in a long time, I've wanted to ask you forever, Agent: How are you enjoying Huxely ;)

3ds will be more like a low res Wii in terms of graphics but yeah I'm much more interested in the NGP too.

Huxley's not out yet. I'm not sure but I think the publisher dropped it and someone else picked it up. I believe it will come out one day but it's still not announced. I don't even care about it anymore. I might try it but I waited so long it fell off my radar. EVE:Online is still keeping me happy anyways.

Most of the games I play now are handheld. I stopped playing PSP and DS games ages back and haven't even considered picking up a 3DS yet (when Mario hits... maybe).

3DS hasn't had a big impact, and a doubt Vita will too. In an age where everybody has smartphones and access to 1000's of high quality cheap games... why would people spend nearly £200 on a new handheld system and then £30 per game?

Maybe 3ds will flop but I think Sony has something nice with PSP vita. Thing is, Sony Nintendo and Microsoft have huge advantage over cellphone companies with regards to gaming. One, they have access to unique retail channels. EBgames and similar stores don't sell cellphones, those retail channels have a following. The other advantage is that all the game developers that have defaulted to the three big companies won't make a complete switch away from them. Some developers do support phones but it's still very limited and even they will still support mainstream gaming devices. The other advantage is that the hardware is fixed. When I watched an interview with John Carmack talking about Rage and mega textures he illustrated how important it is to have fixed ram standards. There's a reason why the PC despite having 30 times more raw performance can't deliver equivalent performance to consoles that have fixed standards. Cellphones have the same problems that PC has, only cellphones lack sufficient raw processing power to compensate. Cellphones suck as gaming devices any way you slice it.

At this point I'm pretty sure Vita will flop. Too expensive and cubersome for these times... I rather get the latest smartphone than a handheld, so would most people. Standalone handhelds will be a relic soon enough.

I might consider gaming on my smartphone if the batteries would last longer and if it had dedicated buttons. So at the moment smartphone gaming only makes me frustrated and unable to make phone calls. I got a 3DS and it was quite a disappointment even though I appreciate Nintendos gift of free downloadable games for early adopters (ironic how old GBA games makes me more happy than the new 3DS games). The PSV looks sweet though, but I'll wait for a price drop... if it survives long enough for one.

I'd consider gaming on my smartphone if it weren't for the fact that my Droid 2 is practically a fossil at this point. 3DSs are just starting to sell in my area and Vitas aren't even touched. If I lived in an area where I traveled by something other than car I'd consider one, but I rarely find myself in a situation where I could play a handheld outside of my house.

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